Scientific Method & Engineering Design
Forces & Motion
Energy, Heat & Molecular Motion
Waves & Energy Transfer
Big Ideas & Physics Reasoning
100

In an experiment, which variable is deliberately changed by the scientist?

The independent variable.

100

A push or pull acting on an object is called what?

A force.

100

What does the law of conservation of energy state?

Energy changes form but is not created or destroyed.

100

How do mechanical waves transfer energy?

By vibrating particles in a medium.

100

Which variable belongs on the x-axis when graphing distance versus time?

timer

200

Why is a control group essential in experimental design?

It provides a baseline for comparison.

200

What happens when two equal forces act in opposite directions on an object?

The object remains at rest or moves at constant velocity (balanced forces).

200

What happens to gas particles when thermal energy is added?

They move faster and spread farther apart.

200

How can you identify a transverse wave?

Particles vibrate perpendicular to the direction the wave travels.

200

Why is a line graph best for showing changes over time?

shows trends and continuous change.

300

Which calculation determines average speed?

Distance divided by time.

300

A heavier cart needs more force to get the same acceleration as a lighter cart. Which law does this support?

Newton’s Second Law.

300

Why does pressure increase in a heated, sealed container?

Particles collide more frequently and with greater force.

300

What type of wave is sound?

A mechanical longitudinal wave.

300

Why does friction often reduce motion energy?

It converts kinetic energy into thermal energy.

400

A science team investigates whether the width and layers a boat has, impacts its ability to hold weight. It tests both variables at the same time. Explain the error.

not a valid experiment , cannot determine results.

400

Why does a soccer ball accelerate when it is kicked but a book on a desk does not?

The kick creates unbalanced forces, while the book experiences balanced forces.

400

Why does thermal energy always flow from hot objects to cold objects?

Energy naturally moves toward equilibrium.

400

Why does constructive interference increase wave amplitude?

Wave displacements add together.

400

How does the particle model of matter explain changes in pressure and temperature?

As particles move faster, collisions increase, raising temperature and pressure.

500

Why is repeating an experiment a good practice?

Repeated data increases reliability and reduces the impact of random error.

500

Explain how does Newton’s Third Law apply to designing car bumpers?

During collisions, forces act in equal and opposite pairs, so bumpers are designed to absorb them

500

How does regenerative braking demonstrate energy transformation and efficiency?

t converts kinetic energy into electrical energy instead of losing it as heat.

500

Why do electromagnetic waves with shorter wavelengths carry more energy?

They have higher frequency.

500

Explain how things studied by physics interact with each other.

forces, energy, and motion interact and affect each other within systems.

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